The Telegram (St. John's)

Forget ‘neutral’: core inflation eyed in Bank of Canada peak rate bets

- FERGAL SMITH

TORONTO —As investors weigh how much further the Bank of Canada will tighten, the level of underlying inflation is likely to be a better signpost than the central bank’s much scrutinize­d estimate of the neutral interest rate, economists say.

Canada’s central bank last week raised its benchmark interest rate to 3.25 per cent — a 14-year high and the highest policy rate among central banks overseeing the 10 most traded currencies.

It left the policy rate above the 2-3 per cent range that the central bank estimates to be a neutral setting, or the level at which monetary policy is neither stimulatin­g nor weighing on the economy.

A move above the neutral rate had been seen by the BOC and investors as a destinatio­n of sorts for interest rates. But economists say that the level for neutral could be underestim­ated in the short term.

“Pinpointin­g the neutral rate in this environmen­t is like trying to hit a moving target while blindfolde­d,” said Royce Mendes, head of macro strategy at Desjardins.

“Realistica­lly, the only way the central bank will know when rates are in restrictiv­e territory is after the fact when the economy shows more signs of stress.”

The BOC defines the neutral rate as the real neutral rate plus 2 percentage points for inflation. The trouble is that inflation no longer runs anywhere near 2 per cent, and not just in Canada.

Some Federal Reserve officials have already said that the U.S. neutral rate could be higher than estimated in the current environmen­t. On Wednesday, U.S. consumer price data undercut investor hopes of an easing in price pressures.

Meanwhile, the Bank of Canada has acknowledg­ed the neutral concept’s shortcomin­gs.

“There isn’t a sort of magic formula that gives us a neutral rate,” Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers said last Thursday. “A lot of it is sort of state dependent or depends on the environmen­t we’re in.”

Canada’s headline inflation rate was at 7.6 per cent in July, while all three of the Boc’s preferred measures of core inflation were at or above 5 per cent. The central bank’s latest forecast, in July, was for inflation to remain above its 2 per cent target until the end of 2024.

“To fully crack inflation, tightening cycles typically need to see short-term interest rates rise above core inflation,” Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note.

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